Vitalik Buterin pfp
Vitalik Buterin
@vitalik.eth
Sometimes you can believe the right thing for the wrong reason.
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Thomas pfp
Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Gettier problems! One of my favorite class of epistemological failures (along with the free pass given to moral luck, and the tolerance of ā€œlittle folliesā€, i.e. seemingly innocuous superstitious beliefs) https://warpcast.com/aviationdoctor.eth/0x63ab01cb https://warpcast.com/aviationdoctor.eth/0x7f35e5b8
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Dinesh Raju pfp
Dinesh Raju
@dinesh.eth
Gettier problems pair nicely with Annie Duke's "resulting", which is when a decision gets judged as good or bad based on the results Resulting makes it much harder to know what's good advice in modern domains. When you have millions of entrepreneurs & investors making path-dependent bets, hard to tell whose success was the result of chance
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Thomas pfp
Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Indeed! I mentioned moral luck without being aware of ā€œresultingā€, but it sounds adjacent if not similar. Speed on your way home, and if nothing happens, society might view you as just being another bad driver. Maybe youā€™ll get a stern talking to or a ticket if you get caught. Speed on your way home and run over a kid, and youā€™ll be a despised criminal for the rest of your life. Youā€™ll likely see the inside of a prison cell. In both scenarios, the initial decision to speed was the same. The outcome was only dictated by chance. Yet we treat the perpetrators differently
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Dinesh Raju pfp
Dinesh Raju
@dinesh.eth
yup many such cases if you look closely at the world around us šŸ¤“
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